252 research outputs found

    A brief introduction to the scaling limits and effective equations in kinetic theory

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    These lecture notes provide the material for a short introductory course on effective equations for classical particle systems. They concern the basic equations in kinetic theory, written by Boltzmann and Landau, describing rarefied gases and weakly interacting plasmas respectively. These equations can be derived formally, under suitable scaling limits, taking classical particle systems as a starting point. A rigorous proof of this limiting procedure is difficult and still largely open. We discuss some mathematical problems arising in this context.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1611.0708

    Propagation of Chaos and Effective Equations in Kinetic Theory: a Brief Survey

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    We review some historical highlights leading to the modern perspective on the concept of chaos from the point of view of the kinetic theory. We focus in particular on the role played by the propagation of chaos in the mathematical derivation of effective equations

    The Boltzmann-Grad Limit of a Hard Sphere System: Analysis of the Correlation Error

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    We present a quantitative analysis of the Boltzmann-Grad (low-density) limit of a hard sphere system. We introduce and study a set of functions (correlation errors) measuring the deviations in time from the statistical independence of particles (propagation of chaos). In the context of the BBGKY hierarchy, a correlation error of order kk measures the event where kk particles are connected by a chain of interactions preventing the factorization. We show that, provided k<Δ−αk < \varepsilon^{-\alpha}, such an error flows to zero with the average density Δ\varepsilon, for short times, as Δγk\varepsilon^{\gamma k}, for some positive α,γ∈(0,1)\alpha,\gamma \in (0,1). This provides an information on the size of chaos, namely, jj different particles behave as dictated by the Boltzmann equation even when jj diverges as a negative power of Δ\varepsilon. The result requires a rearrangement of Lanford perturbative series into a cumulant type expansion, and an analysis of many-recollision events.Comment: 98 pages, 12 figures. Subject of the Harold Grad Lecture at the 29th International Symposium on Rarefied Gas Dynamics (Xi'an, China). This revised version contains new results (a theorem on the convergence of high order fluctuations; estimates of integrated correlation error) and several improvements of presentation, inspired by comments of the anonymous refere

    On the evolution of the empirical measure for the Hard-Sphere dynamics

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    We prove that the evolution of marginals associated to the empirical measure of a finite system of hard spheres is driven by the BBGKY hierarchical expansion. The usual hierarchy of equations for L1L^1 measures is obtained as a corollary. We discuss the ambiguities arising in the corresponding notion of microscopic series solution to the Boltzmann-Enskog equation

    On the validity of the Boltzmann equation for short range potentials

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    We consider a classical system of point particles interacting by means of a short range potential. We prove that, in the low--density (Boltzmann--Grad) limit, the system behaves, for short times, as predicted by the associated Boltzmann equation. This is a revisitation and an extension of the thesis of King (unpublished), appeared after the well known result of Lanford for hard spheres, and of a recent paper by Gallagher et al (arXiv: 1208.5753v1). Our analysis applies to any stable and smooth potential. In the case of repulsive potentials (with no attractive parts), we estimate explicitly the rate of convergence

    Evolution of correlation functions in the hard sphere dynamics

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    The series expansion for the evolution of the correlation functions of a finite system of hard spheres is derived from direct integration of the solution of the Liouville equation, with minimal regularity assumptions on the density of the initial measure. The usual BBGKY hierarchy of equations is then recovered. A graphical language based on the notion of collision history originally introduced by Spohn is developed, as a useful tool for the description of the expansion and of the elimination of degrees of freedom
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